Yesterday, the Bay Area’s own Peet’s Coffee & Tea opened a new shop in San Francisco’s Marina District that is hoped to be a model for the future Peet’s outposts. The Starbucks location a few doors down suddenly seems dwarfed and dated.

With high ceilings and a living wall of plants in the rear, the 2,500-square-foot Peet’s store is quite gorgeous. It’s said to be a “contemporary interpretation” of California’s Craftsman design movement, and it certainly does look more like one of San Francisco’s modern, independent coffee shops (like Four Barrel or Sightglass) than a cookie-cutter chain with dozens of shops across America. There’s an espresso bar, topped with Carrara marble. Communal tables are made from repurposed bowling alley lanes. Local artists’ work lines the walls, along with vintage artifacts from Peet’s history. The design also highlights the 80-year-old Art Deco building’s steel beams and fir ceiling.

Peet’s hopes to roll out this design model in other markets, starting with Washington, DC later this year. Your move, Starbucks.